I really believe this damned IPV6 is too much complicated. I think that is the main reason why the entire world does not apply it. I almost gave up about it.
I agree, but unfortunately it seems to be the way K-Net has rolled out their IPv6 implementation (it's not that difficult with my ISP... Rogers in Canada... where everything is fairly automatic).
You'll need to tell your router where to route IPv6 traffic, and a hint for what to do in your case might come from this post...
From my ISP I have
LAN IP adress 2a03:xxxx:xxd:8300::1/64
WAN IP adress 2a03:xxxx:xx2:1500::1/128
How did you get this information?
I got it from my ISP when I plugged their original box. As it the IPV6 feature was working but the box was poor. So now I use my own r7000 box with ddwrt and spoofed mac adress.
I really believe this damned IPV6 is too much complicated. I think that is the main reason why the entire world does not apply it. I almost gave up about it.
I agree, but unfortunately it seems to be the way K-Net has rolled out their IPv6 implementation (it's not that difficult with my ISP... Rogers in Canada... where everything is fairly automatic).
You'll need to tell your router where to route IPv6 traffic
Thank you for reply. I already saw this thread of course and tried to do the same settings...... without any success. Maybe should I look for 4to6 tunnel or something similar.
Btw thank to all for your replies, everybody in this forum is cool
From my ISP I have
LAN IP adress 2a03:xxxx:xxd:8300::1/64
WAN IP adress 2a03:xxxx:xx2:1500::1/128
I got it from my ISP when I plugged their original box. As it the IPV6 feature was working but the box was poor. So now I use my own r7000 box with ddwrt and spoofed mac adress.
Can you post a screenshot of the working IPv6 configuration from the original ISP box? It may offer some information to assist in setup of ddwrt.
Erase any startup commands or Additional Dnsmasq Options related to IPv6 that you've added, and try the basic configuration in the attached screenshot.
After you've saved and applied the configuration to your router, I'd suggest disconnecting and then reconnecting the wifi of the client you're testing from to ensure it's assigned an IPv6 address.
Just to know, the r7000 MAC address has a cloned adress as the original ISP router. Can it has a relationship with the ipv6 feature problem ?
Could you describe your complete setup? I was starting to think your ISP device wasn't put in bridge mode. I'm also curious what the syslog of your router is logging.